MSU Billings to Add Five to Hall of Fame (2/8/06)
BILLINGS, MT – Montana State
University-Billings has announced that five new members will be
added to its Athletics Hall of Fame and Distinction. The annual
induction ceremony and brunch will take place on Saturday,
February 18 at 10:00 a.m. in the Student Union Ballroom.
Tickets for the induction ceremony and brunch
cost $10.00 and can be purchased in advance. Reservations can be
made by calling the MSU Billings Athletics office at 657-2369.
Since MSU Billings created the Athletics Hall
of Fame and Distinction in 1990, 106 members have been inducted.
The Class of 2006—Nos. 107-111—includes Ted Anderson, Mark
Hamilton, Alicia (Cahill) Hutzenbiler, Charles Ray Shaffer, and
Iona (Fortier) Stookey.
Anderson was the head women’s basketball
coach from 1981 to 1987. In six seasons he guided the Lady
Yellowjackets to a 102-58 overall record and a 39-21 mark in
conference games. Since women’s basketball was added at the
school in 1973, only Anderson and fellow Hall of Fame coach Frank
McCarthy have posted over 100 career wins. Anderson was at the
helm of the first Lady Yellowjacket team to qualify for an NCAA
Tournament in 1986-87, beginning a tradition that has resulted in
10 NCAA Tournament appearances since 1987.
Hamilton played men’s basketball for the
Yellowjackets from 1994 to 1998. He scored 1,463 points in his
four-year career, still the eighth-most in school history. One of
the most prolific shooters the Yellowjacket program has ever
produced, Hamilton also still ranks third all-time for 3-pointers
made (286) and fourth for 3-point field goal percentage (42.56).
Making Hamilton’s individual success more notable is the fact that
he played in three NCAA Tournaments and helped lead the Jackets to
two conference championships.
Hutzenbiler played women’s basketball from
1995 to 1999, one of the most successful eras in Lady Yellowjacket
history. During her career the Lady Jackets won three conference
titles and qualified for the NCAA Tournament four times. In
Hutzenbiler’s senior season the Yellowjackets won the NCAA West
Regional in Davis, CA and became the only MSU Billings women’s
basketball team to advance to the Elite Eight. Hutzenbiler scored
1,183 career points, still the twelfth-most in school history.
She is also still eighth for field goals made (483), eighth for
field goal percentage (50.26), third for rebounds (810), and fifth
for blocked shots (71).
Shaffer competed in basketball, baseball, and
track and field from 1959 to 1963. He also played one year of
football for the Yellowjackets. In basketball Shaffer earned
all-conference honors as a sophomore and junior. In the 1959-1960
season he led the Yellowjackets in scoring with 315 points in 22
games (14.3 ppg). Shaffer played centerfield for the Yellowjacket
baseball team and competed in the 100, 220, long jump, and high
jump on the track and field team. After graduating from Eastern
Montana College, Shaffer went on to teach and coach at Broadview
High School (Mont.), Sheridan High School (Wyo.), and Adams County
(Colo.).
Stookey played volleyball for the Lady
Yellowjackets from 1986-1989. In the 1988 season she led the
Yellowjackets with 369 kills, a mark that still stands as the
eighth-best single season total in school history. She also had
52 service aces in 1988, the fifth-best season to date in school
history. After graduating from Eastern Montana College, Stookey
became the head volleyball coach at Huntley Project High School
where she has taught and coached for 16 years. Her volleyball
teams have compiled a 382-128 record during her tenure, including
back-to-back undefeated state championship teams in 2003 and
2004. During that stretch Huntley Project had a 99 match winning
streak and Stookey was twice named the Montana Coach of the Year. |